Unless we have a major donor(s) step to the table with money to cover the shortfall in the Athletic Department budget, Romar's going nowhere and it has nothing to do with his on court performance and everything to do with the $$$ required to buy him out + find another coach.
Buying him out is the only number I'm concerned with because we know for a fact UW doesn't actually spend money on searches.
Until she actually has to hire someone, who gives a shit about AD's. If the scrapping of the retarded white helmet uniforms is her doing that's good enough for me. You know she won't fire romar though, no matter how bad he sucks.
I wont defend Cohen, but if I were AD I would use Peterman. Results are results. Until we fuck up, last week was a very big deal.
I hated Peterman the first two years because we sucked. I like him now because we are undefeated. I enjoy being right, but I really just want UW to be good.
That's quite the article. Since I prefer not to incinerate money I haven't been to a game in probably 10 years now and didn't realize the AD was doing dynamic pricing. Their pricing strategy completely backfired. To get value out of dynamic pricing you need customers who actually want (or need) your product, and customers can't have the expectation that they can out smart the pricing algorithm.
And yet, our always-finding-new-ways-to-fail athletic department now has customers with expectations that they can outsmart the pricing of the AD's product.
But what’s really hurt sales, they say, are increased nonconference “cupcake’” opponents. UW says it’s difficult to attract top nonconference teams, but brokers allege weak scheduling was intentional so the Huskies could bolster early-season records after the 0-12 debacle of 2008.
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I hated Peterman the first two years because we sucked. I like him now because we are undefeated. I enjoy being right, but I really just want UW to be good.
And yet, our always-finding-new-ways-to-fail athletic department now has customers with expectations that they can outsmart the pricing of the AD's product.
But what’s really hurt sales, they say, are increased nonconference “cupcake’” opponents. UW says it’s difficult to attract top nonconference teams, but brokers allege weak scheduling was intentional so the Huskies could bolster early-season records after the 0-12 debacle of 2008.
Somebody should tell him the game was sold out last week and the fans seemed quite happy.